With the growing interest in literary approaches to the Bible, most notably studies in narrative analogy, comes an increasing sensitivity to the literary strategies of a biblical author’s reuse of unique vocabulary and sequences of events from earlier narratives. While scholars have called attention to Isaiah’s reuse of the Exodus Narrative in his “New Exodus” (Isaiah 40-55) and Daniel’s reuse of the Joseph Narrative in the narratives about Daniel and his three companions (Daniel 1-6), no one has specifically addressed the question of the corporate versus the individual identity of the “servant of the LORD” in Isaiah 52:13-53:12 and “one like a son of man” in Daniel 7:13-14 from the perspective of narrative analogy. In this paper, therefore, I will provide exegetical evidence based on insights from the study of narrative analogy which I hope will tip the scales in favor of the “Messianic” interpretation of Isaiah’s Fourth Servant Song and Daniel’s “one like a son of man.”